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I honestly don't see it in antitrust. Maybe practice is way different, but the class only touches on some economic concepts and isn't all that quantitative.

I don't know any area of law that requires more quantitative skill than a good knowledge of statistics, in terms of what studies mean and don't mean, etc.

Reorg/Bankruptcy requires a lot of math and accounting day to day, especially at the decision making level.

And bump for a better response than I can give.

Edited to add that I know that executive compensation and estate planning are all about valuation, so to the extent that any of that work is offered in house instead of by a separate consultant there are some basic but involved calculations.

As mentioned, bankruptcy and reorganization is animated by finance theory and frequently involves in-court valuation battles. But of course ultimately most of the actual number-crunching will be done by restructuring consultants and investment banks. A quantitative-ish background, especially in accounting, finance, or economics, can be helpful in fields like tax, antitrust, restructuring, and even general transactional practice, but you're unlikely to actually do much serious quantitative work in any legal field.